The
Programs Evaluation Office was a military mission to
Laos, established in 1955 by the
United States Department of Defense.
Motive
With the end of
World War II, Laos was no longer under the
French Union but entirely sovereign and was governed by the
Royal Lao Government. The
Royal Lao Army was placed under the Ministry of Defense in
Vientiane. The agreements reached at the
Geneva Conference (1954) prohibited Laos from having foreign military bases and participating in any foreign military alliance, but allowed a small French military training mission which supported the Royal Lao Army. As part of its goal of
containment, the U.S. sought to ensure that the Royal Lao Army was capable of meeting the threat posed by the
Pathet Lao, who were backed by communist
North Vietnam.
As a subterfuge to get around the prohibition against foreign military personnel imposed by the
Geneva Agreements – which the United States had pledged to honor – the Department of Defense in December 1955 established a disguised military mission in
Vientiane called the Programs Evaluation Office (PEO). The PEO became operational on
December 13,
1955 and worked under the cover of the civilian aid mission and was staffed by United States military personnel and headed by a general officer, all of whom wore civilian clothes and had been removed from Department of Defense rosters of active service personnel. From 1955 to 1961, the PEO gradually supplanted the French military mission in providing equipment and training to the Royal Lao Army.
Change of Government in Laos
A coalition government emerged in Vientiane in 1957, which included royalists as well as the
Pathet Lao, but lasted only until July 1958, when there was a right-wing coup through which General
Phoumi Nosavan emerged as a head of state. As an anti-communist, Phoumi was concerned by the spread of the
Pathet Lao's influence, and he requested additional help from the United States. By 1959, the PEO had more than 100 members on its staff, and the United States was paying the entire cost of the Royal Lao Army's salaries.
Up-grade
On
August 9,
1960, Phoumi’s government was removed in a lightning
coup d'état by a group termed the Neutralists led by Captain
Kong Le, a paratroop officer of the Royal Lao Army. PEO headquarters in Vientiane became inactive following the coup, but the PEO branch office in
Savannakhét -- Phoumi's headquarters -- continued to supply and pay Phoumi's troops. Eventually, Phoumi re-captured Vientiane. In April 1961, the PEO was upgraded to a
Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG), and its members were allowed to wear uniforms. The MAAG was withdrawn in 1962 under the terms of the Geneva Agreement, and
CIA personnel operating from a base in
Thailand took over the support of those opposed to the
Pathet Lao.
Category:Vietnam WarCategory:History of Laos